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Affordability of nutrient-adequate diets as an indicator for food and nutrition security. Evidence from fill the nutrient gap analyses

Sabrina Kuri, Zuzanna Turowska, Claudia Damu, Janosch Klemm, Saskia de Pee

2024Global Food Security12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We conducted an ecological study using data from 373 subnational units in 32 countries collected from 2011 to 2020, to explore the associations of non-affordability of nutrient-adequate diets and of food insecurity (percentage of people with poor or borderline Food Consumption Score) with indicators measuring dietary quality and nutritional status. We found a strong negative monotonic correlation between non-affordability of nutrient-adequate diets and minimum dietary diversity in children 6–23 months ( r s = − 0.65 , p < 0.01 ), and a weaker correlation between poor or borderline Food Consumption Score with the same dietary diversity indicator ( r s = − 0.39 , p < 0.01 ). The relations between non-affordability and nutrition outcomes (prevalence of stunting and the composite indicator of ‘people deprived in nutrition’) were also highly significant at the subnational level, and had larger coefficients than indicators focusing on caloric adequacy. Examining these relations subnationally could provide relevant information for policies and programs aiming to address the risk of nutrition insecurity due to economic inaccessibility. Compared to dietary quality indicators, non-affordability is a relatively easy indicator to calculate and has the potential to use secondary data already captured through existing government systems. • Indicators measuring affordability of diets reveal household economic constraints to accessing diets that meet their food and nutrition needs. • Non-affordability of nutrient-adequate diets indicates both food and nutrition security. • Non-affordability of nutrient-adequate diets is associated with nutrition outcomes at the subnational level. • Non-affordability is a relatively easy indicator to calculate, as it mostly uses secondary data. • Cost and non-affordability of nutrient-adequate diets should be regularly monitored.

Topics & Concepts

NutrientFood securityNutrient densityEnvironmental scienceBusinessNatural resource economicsEnvironmental healthBiologyEconomicsEcologyMedicineAgricultureChild Nutrition and Water AccessFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental Impact
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